Yes, it’s true. I’ll be making a brief appearance in a movie coming out soon. It’s a documentary about my old San Francisco Chronicle pal, Armistead Maupin, the author of the ribald, much-loved “Tales of the City” novels and TV series.

Documentarian Jennifer M. Kroot needed to interview someone who’d been there at the birth of “Tales of the City” and could tell some tales out of school.

I love a good story and I do have a few to tell about Armistead’s struggles to show up at the Chronicle city room on a regular basis and turn in newspaper copy on a tight deadline. Deadlines are a challenge for the best of journalists, but unlike beat reporters who arrive at their keyboards with a fistful of notes and quotes to draw on — facts — Army had to pull his copy out of thin air. He had to make his stuff up.

Armistead Maupin at a book signing at Book Passage in San Francisco. Photo by Barbara Newhall

‘Tales of the City’ — Real-Life Stories?

Of course, some of us in the features department — that’s where Armistead was assigned to sit and grind out his copy — suspected, judging by the circles under his eyes on some mornings, that many of the events described in “Tales of the City” had in fact transpired the night before in real-world San Francisco.

The film, titled “The Untold Tales of Armistead Maupin,” chronicles Armistead’s evolution from a closeted Southerner with a deeply conservative mentality to the open-hearted author of stories in which a madcap array of people, gay and straight, blue collar and social register, meet and mingle, with hilarious results.

Kroot is the director of “To Be Takei,” which documents the life of “Star Trek’s” George Takei. That film premiered at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival. She also directed “It Came From Kuchar,” which limns the careers of cult filmmakers George and Mike Kuchar. Gerry Kim and Mayuran Tiruchelvam are the producers. Bill Weber is the editor. The project has been receiving financial support through its fiscal sponsor, the International Documentary Association.

The film is nearly completed, and filmmaker Kroot tells me that I have “some great moments” in it. A crew and cast screening is scheduled for February. Armistead is dear to my heart, and I think I’m going to love this movie.

So true. We had a lot of good times and great conversations. Newspaper people are the best. Right now I am deeply appreciating the efforts we went to and the standards we had to meet as we reported the news.